| | | "HD-DVD, The Look & Sound of Perfect." Features: DVD, Dolby, Dolby Digital (5.1), English, French, Spanish In this science fiction masterpiece, Cole (Bruce Willis) is sent back in time to save the human race from a deadly virus that has forced mankind into dank underground communities in the future. Along his travels, he encounters a psychiatrist (Madeleine Stowe) and a mental patient, brilliantly portrayed by Brad Pitt, who may hold the key to the mysterious rogue group, The Army of the 12 Monkeys, thought to be responsible for unleashing the killer disease. Believing he can obtain a pure virus sample in order to find a cure in the future, he is met with one riddle after another that puts him in a race for time.System Requirements:Run Time: 190 minsFormat: HD DVD "Bruce Willis is bruisingly good as the hero and Brad Pitt is suitably zany as the activist who dogs his trail." David Sterritt, Christian Science Monitor "Fierce and disturbing, with a plot that skillfully resists following any familiar course." Janet Maslin, New York Times "...a disturbing and dazzling lost world." Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
 Editor's Note
 When a man enters a hospital claiming to have journeyed back in time from the year 2025 to stop a killer virus from exterminating mankind, a beautiful psychologist decides he might be more than delusional. Terry Gilliam populates this labyrinthine, apocalyptic film with twisted characters and eerie revelations. The film was shot primarily in Philadelphia; Gilliam uses the more dilapidated area of the city to the film's apocalyptic advantage. The film is based on the 1962 French short film LA JETEE.
 Plot Summary
 In this intriguing science fiction film from director Terry Gilliam, penal colony prisoner James Cole must travel back in time from the year 2035 to find the cause of a virus that killed five billion people in 1997.| Cole's trip into the past won't be easy. For starters, he winds up in the wrong year on his first attempt. Once, as he time-travels, Cole ends up a prisoner in an insane asylum in 1990. There, he meets psychiatrist Kathryn Railly and inmate Jeffrey Goines, who could hold the key to the epidemic's spread. Cole later winds up in the middle of a World War I battlefield. | After meeting James for a second time, in another year, Dr. Railly gets further involved in his quest. Although she thinks at first that Cole must be crazy, Kathryn soon starts to believe him and attempts to help.| But James has already started to question his own sanity and tries to figure out if his journeys through time are real or if he's just been imagining everything.
| Features | Archives |  | Audio Commentary By Director Terry Gilliam & Producer Charles Roven |  | Audio: English, French Dolby Digital Plus 5.1 Surround Sound |  | Dubbed: French |  | Featurette: The Hamster Factor & Other Tales Of 12 Monkeys |  | Interactive Menus |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |  | Theatrical Trailers |  | This Is An HD-DVD Made For HD-DVD Format Players Which Produce Higher Quality Picture And Sound |
| Entertainment Reviews
 | 12 Monkeys - HD DVD Review By: Matt Paprocki - Blogcritics.org Reviews Published on: 11/14/2007 7:48 AM | | 12 Monkeys is still superb sci-fi, engrossing to the end. There’s a wonderful twist in characters as Cole begins to believe he’s crazy and his psychiatrist has to convince him he’s right. Brad Pitt was nominated for an Oscar for his stand-out portrayal of a mental patient.
...read the full review |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Universal |
 | Release Date: 10/24/2006 |
 | Running Time: 130 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 1995 |  | Catalog ID: 27780 |  | UPC: 00025192778025 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English, French Dubbed |  | Available Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | Winner (1996) |  | Golden Globe, Brad Pitt, st Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture | | Nominee (1996) |  | MTV Award, Brad Pitt, Best Male Performance |  | Oscar, Julie Weiss, Best Costume Design |  | Oscar, Brad Pitt, Best Supporting Actor |
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| | Professional Reviews | Premiere "...Plenty of surrealistic fluorish..." 12/01/1995 p.36Rolling Stone "...Pitt is terrific....Solving the riddle of 12 MONKEYS is an exhilarating challenge..." 01/29/1996 p.64-66 USA Today "...A Hitchcockian chase...A crowd-pleasing airport-pursuit pic..." -- 3 1/2 out of 4 stars 12/27/1995 p.1D Entertainment Weekly "...A near-fractal script,...[an] achingly battered performance [by Willis]...and its own pell-mell momentum....Emotional urgency..." -- Rating: B 07/12/1996 pp.64-5 Los Angeles Times "...An unlikely love story combined with a visionary detective yarn....Mystifying, intriguing..." 12/27/1995 p.F1 ReelViews 9 of 10 Any film that enters the realm of time travel does so at its own peril. You need look no further than last year's disastrous Timecop to understand why. Even James Cameron's Terminator films treaded uncertainly through the minefield of paradoxes created by people venturing across the landscape of their own pasts. Thus, it's a refreshing to encounter a movie with a logical, intelligent approach to the dangers of zipping through time. While I won't claim that Twelve Monkeys has a decisive solution (how can anything be "decisive" when it's so firmly grounded in fantasy?), this approach makes sense, primarily because the time trippers here aren't trying to change the past (hence, wiping out reality), but are instead observing it to make a better future. - James Berardinelli Chicago Sun-Times 8 of 10 Terry Gilliam's ambitious "12 Monkeys" was co-authored by David Peoples, who wrote "Blade Runner," and it has the same view of the near future as a grunge pit - a view it shares with Gilliam's own "Brazil." In this world, everything is rusty, subterranean, and leaks. The movie uses its future world as a home base and launching pad for the central story, which is set in 1990 and 1996, and is about a time traveler trying to save the world from a deadly plague...I've seen "12 Monkeys" described as a comedy. Any laughs that it inspires will be very hollow. It's more of a celebration of madness and doom, with a hero who tries to prevail against the chaos of his condition, and is inadequate. - Roger Ebert
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